Thousands of forced disappearances under Hasina rule in Bangladesh: Inquiry

Thousands of forced disappearances under Hasina rule in Bangladesh: Inquiry

According to Bangladesh, there could be between 4 000 and 6 000 enforced disappearance cases involving ousted leader Sheikh Hasina.

A total of 1, 913 complaints were filed with it over disappearances, of which 1, 569 were deemed to have disappeared “definition after verification selection,” according to a new report released by the Commission of Inquiry on Enforced Disappearances on Sunday.

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According to the report, 287 allegations fell under the “Missing and Dead” category, according to Bangladesh’s Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus’ post on Facebook.

Nabila Idris, a commission member, claimed that there could be between 4 000 and 6 000 enforced disappearances.

“We reach more victims than those who have not contacted us, are unfamiliar with us, or have relocated to another country,” according to the statement from the organization. Many people, even if we spoke directly to each other, did not agree to speak on the record, according to Idris.

Hasina fled to India in November after being brutally beaten by security forces during the student-led protests that numbered hundreds and resulted in the death penalty.

Members of the commission, which was established after Hasina’s ouster, claimed that the forced disappearances were motivated primarily by political reasons.

The two main political rivals of Hasina’s Awami League, the Jamaat-e-Islami, and BNP, the two leaders who disappeared and returned alive, were 75% and 22% Jamaat-e-Islami members.

According to the report, “22 percent]are from the] Jamaat-Camp, while 68 percent of the missing are BNP and organization leaders.”

According to the report, the disappearances’ suspects included former home minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal, her defense adviser Tarique Ahmed Siddique, and Awami League chief Hasina.

It claimed that Hasina ordered the disappearance of Abdullahil Amaan Azmi, Mir Ahmad Bin Quasem, and Maruf Zaman, the leaders of the BNP, Hummam Quader Chowdhury, Salahuddin Ahmed, Chowdhury Alam, and Jamaat-e-Islami.

The interim government chief thanked the inquiry’s members for their ongoing efforts to find victims of forced disappearances, calling them “historicals.”

He said, “This report is a record of how people can be treated with democracy by upholding Bangladesh’s institutions with double standards.”

“People like us are the ones who caused this terrible incident,” they say. They are leading the most brutal events by leading normal lives in society. We as a people must end this horrible behavior forever. He continued, “We must find the solution so that this atrocity never returns.”

Khaleda Zia, a three-time prime minister and longtime BNP leader, and Hasina’s main rival, passed away in Bangladesh late last month.

Source: Aljazeera

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